Apheresis (linguistics)
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Dissimilation |
In phonetics, apheresis (/əˈfɛrᵻsɪs, əˈfɪərᵻsɪs/; British English: aphaeresis) is the loss of one or more sounds from the beginning of a word, especially the loss of an unstressed vowel, thus producing a new form called an aphetism (/ˈæfɪtɪzᵊm/).
Etymology
Apheresis comes from Greek ἀφαίρεσις from ἀπό apo, "away" and αἱρέω haireo, "to take."
Apheresis as a historical sound change
In historical phonetics, the term "apheresis" is often but not always limited to the loss of an unstressed vowel. The Oxford English Dictionary gives this particular kind of apheresis the name aphesis (/ˈæfᵻsɪs/; from Greek ἄφεσις).
Loss of any sound
- English [k]nife → /ˈnaɪf/
- Proto-Norse *[st]randa- (Swedish strand) > Finnish ranta "beach"
Loss of an unstressed vowel
- Greek epískopos > Vulgar Latin *ebiscopus > Old English bisceop 'bishop'
- English acute > cute
- Middle English Egipcien > gipcyan, gipsen 'Gypsy'[1]
- English alone > lone
- English amend > mend
- English escape + goat > scapegoat[2]
- Old French e(s)vanisse > Middle English vanisshen 'vanish'
- Old French estable > English stable
- Old French estrange > English strange
- English esquire > squire
- Greek Assyria > Syria
Apheresis as a poetic device
- English it is > poetic 'tis
- English upon > 'pon
Apheresis in informal speech
- Spanish está > familiar Spanish [e]tá > ta ('is')
- English oath God's truth > familiar Australian English: strewth (exclamation)
- English America > familiar American English Murica, Mur-ca
See also
Look up apheresis or aphaeresis in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
References
Notes
Bibliography
- Crowley, Terry (1997). An Introduction to Historical Linguistics. 3rd edition. Oxford University Press.
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